The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 June 1929 — Page 1
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THE DAILY BANKER
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lume thirty-seven.
C.REENCASTLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1929.
NO. 210
MENT PLANT SECIZ WAS JE SUCCESS
A THIRSTY CROWD It was a thirsty crowd at the Lone Star Cement Company barbecue Wednesday, according to the amount of Coca Cola, furni.-hed by Gar lner
Bros.
They furnished 16,416 bottles of
| Coca Cola during the d»y and the dovim itfi v io ttnn wprf supply was exhaustPd beforp th(; m 'dro l d,e of the a f‘ p rnoon. In ad.lition to CBSTS OF LONE STAR CO. the Coca Colai ke waU , r was avail . w EDNt. D | able at all the rsanitury fountains ■ 1 — ; surrounding the buildings, and probRLY 6,000 REGISTERED ably many gallons of pure water ; were drank in addition to the bottled
goods.
SMALL NUMBER HAVE SECURED NEW LICENSES
LESS THAN 1.000 MOTORISTS HAVE APPLIED FOR DRIVER’S PERMITS
LAW
EFFECT JULY 1
ent Officials Left Nothing Unone To Provide For Safety And rcomodation Of Record Throng
ith a total registration of 4,655, approximately that many or more
Some 7,000 Aulo Drivers In County Must Obtain Licenses Within
Next Nine Days
ZOOK BABY DIES
Roland Keith Zook, 2 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Zook, East Walnut St., died at two o'clock Wed-
nesday afternoon. Funeral services j the new Indiana State law governing
nt, the big barbecue staged by ' will be held at the home at 10 o’- driver:- license goes into effect, only Lone Star Cement Company at | clock Friday morning. Interment will 1)58 people have applied for licenses jmedale plant on Wednesday, { be in Oak Hill Cemetery at Craw-, at the official licen branch at the
With Ic.-s than ten days left !>• fore
erl a big success.
I fordsville.
WILL OBJECTIONS FILED
—o-j-
Objections to the probate of the will of Jamc- 11. Brumfield were filed in the circuit court Thursday morning by Sallic E. McGaughey, and Kate Morris. At the time of the probate of the will in March objections were also filed. At that time the Citizens Trust Company was appointed administrator of the estate while it was in litigation. Hays and Murphy arc the attorneys for the plaintiffs, and James and Alice for the defendant, Mary C. Brum-
field.
In the complaint the objections are made on the grounds that the will was unduly executed; that the decea - ed was of unsound mind when the alleged will was executed; and that undue influence on the part of the
defendant was used.
The estate was estimated at a pro bate value of $2500, and in
CO-ED SLAYER SUSPECT ASKS FOR ATTORNEY
OHIO STATE
I ESSOK AGREES
“TELL ALL”
VICTIM HAD DRUG
NEW FICTION RECEIVED New fiction books have been added to the shelves of the city library and will be placid in circulation in the
near future.
A few have registered for the Treasure Hunt which will start on | July 1. The grades of the hunt run I from the third grade through high
UNIVERSITY PRO-- s( .|, 00 i alu | i-pgistuition will continue
until the reading starts.
Among the new hooks are: "The Sealed Trunk,” Webster; “The Green HABIT Toad," Masterman; “Lorna Moon,” "AH Quiet on the Western Front,”
TEXAS WOMAN BADLY HURT IN HEADON CRASH
MRS. A. M. WELCH SUSTAINS FRACTURED SKULL AND OTHER INJURIES
ACCIDENT
Alleged Killer To Teii His story To| ^3^':,,,.,^;;;;^::;’“;:;^^:;^;^
Lawyer. Girl Was Brutally Wt , b , » 1!um ,.
Slain. I- •
JUNCTION
COLUMBUS, O., June 20. (UP) — The revelation that Miss Theora Hix, slain Ohio State University co-ed, was
a user of narcotics was made today 'Heywood; “Young Mrs. Greedy, the wilT by Hr. James H. "Snook, her protector,! ingUm; "Six Mrs. Greenes",
“Swords and Roses,"
Hergesheime i; “Sheaves,” Oemley; “Strange Moons," Stribling; “The Broken Marriage,” Murray; “The
Two Cars ( ollide At Intersection Of National Highway And State Road 43 Thursday.
the throng of nearly 5,000 who | Acred, 18 of the 48 states of the j and one foreign possession, the ] aiian Islands, were represented.) tal of 16,416 bottles of coca-cola, jshed by Gardner Bros.; loaf after | of bread, furnished by the LueBakery; hundreds of pounds of j *. and more than a ton of young were consumed by thV record |
d
■ cement officials and employees 1 difficult job to take rare of the -iinds of visitors but they did it \ery efficient an! commendable ‘r. Nothing was left undone to jide for the safety of their guests.
Cement Company President Wires Congratulations
H. Struckman Sends
Chamber of Commerce Wire
Thanka On Cooperation.
H. Struckman, president of the International Cement Corporation, of which the Lone Star Cement Co., In-
hmen were stationed at all rail-! diana, lnc„ ia • part, wired the Greencrosaing* and not a single acci- castle Chamber of Commerce Wednesof any consequence was reported, day on their co-operation on the big Fe big plant and around the barbecue given at the plant, aids were First Aid men who ; His wire was as follows:
assistance when two or three n were overcome due to the inheat and exertion, ployees acted as guides and each [very courtecua and attentive to roups that were shown through ill. All electric current, except o'.ver line operating the kiln, was off for the lay, another step in arefully laid safety plans. !?cial trains were in eperation to ‘rom th» mill to the quarry and took this trip of inspection, vy automobile traffic was han-splendidly-and apparently the hitch in the proceedings was the .hat too many wanted to eat at "ame time. As it was, nearly persons were adequately taken of at a time in the improvised g room and the barbecue meal
IfMicious.
frequent intervals, from 10 a. atil 2 p. m., the Greencastle Band [irhed music which made a big hit th« viiitors. out the middle of the afternoon, crowd at the cement plant began our into Greencastle where spe,Lone Star bargains had been adBed by the rmrehants. The .-tor/hieh had been closed during the Veue proceedings, remained open nesday evening during the band :ert, th’ first official appearance lie local musicians for the present Wr season. Business men report air sale*, although some did not he amount of business they had cte I because of th° worthwhile cleg they had offered at extreme-
nw prices.
11 in all, it was indeed a big day he history of Greencastle and nam county, and as many expresst is hoped that this will not be the taibecue given by the Lone Star jent Company.
"Regret exceedingly that very important business engagement prevents me from being with you tomorrow at home coming at Limedale. Lone
! Franklin Street Garage,
j Eight thousand blank have been I received at the branch office and if | all the auto drivers in the eounty ap- ■ ply for licenses before July 1 there
I is going to be a rush.
' To take care of the rush, and peoi pie who cannot get them at any other time, the branch office is staying open for the next two Saturday evenings, the 22nd and 29th of this
Greencastle I month. The law goes into effect on
Monday, July 1.
Last year over four thousand pas-1 senger and truck license were issued from the local branch. On the aver-! ag there are two drivers to every car, j leaving seven thousand people still to apply for their drivers licenses
fore July 1.
If the license is obtained at the brunch office, no other signature o'her than the notary public is needed. Otherwise a free-holder must sign 'he
application.
The regular licenses began arriving in Greencastle Thur.-day. Those who made their application early in the
was left to the widow, Mary C. Brum- [ simultaneously with a promise to "tell “The King Murder," Jone
field, a second wife.
all” regarding her murder.
Yielding after 16 hour.* of questionj ing, the bespectacled professor sent i for attorney John M. Seidel, his coun- ' sol, pieliminary to giving authorities | the complete story of what he knew
i regarding Miss Hix’s death.
r**/ A1,hoUKh ()Uo T b 'H'l ,s i to ll\ II l|\l |<|< XN! whom Dr. Snook made new admission- ^ ^ ^ vj J j i erim , ( | ti„, veterinarian’s statement ______ I “a partial confession,” the strongest
\TTI ' ren,ar k Snook made was that
TWO MONTHS RECESS TAKEN
HOUSE DISPLAYS ((KM TUDE TOWARDS SENATE
AS DOORS CLOSE.
WASHINGTON, June 20 (UP) — be-j The House and Senate turned their backs to each other and went off for their summer vacation- today in <q>-
he was
j “ready to tell all.
I That remark was offered at the conclusion of a period of examination,: just as detective Phillips had given up hope and was about to return the; dismissed member of the Ohio State ^
faculty to his cell.
Resorting to a last psychological
posite directions, sore and disgruntled, | the detective turned suddenly and threatening dire things against j on |i r- Enook and demanded:
Star Cement Company, Iml., appreci
ates greatly the honor of being stat- m ° nth " ,,w hBVe thr '"« ular l ■ ar,, •
ed as host for the citizens of Putnam county. On such an occasion it is my earnest wi-h that the weather will be favorable and all prrsent will have a most enjoyable time. Sincere
regards."
SLAYER EXECUTED
each other when they reconevene in the fall to thresh out a tariff bill. The situation was so strained that the House recessed without the courtesy of informing the Senate of its action. The Senate wa considering legislation upon which it expected the House to act, but finally Senate floor
Dawes’ Talk Is Highly Approved
ARMS REDUCTION ADDRESS BY U. S. AMBASSADOR MAKES BIG HIT
|—At the expiration of a week’s reI prirve which had been granted by Gov. Dan Moody so that he might “make his peace with God," O. C. Wells, of Coleman, wa ■ electrocuted | early today for the murder of J. A.
Mitchell, filling station opeiator.
MASONIC NOTH E
Called meeting Temple Lodge No. 47, Friday 7:30 p. m. M. M. degree.
R. H. Trembly, W. M. E. E. Caldwell, Secy.
GENEVA, June 20. (UP)—United
States Ambas-ador Chatles G. Dawes'[ President Hoover today
nd Wallets In ment Plant Pond
speech in London Tuesday night was viewed in League of Nations quarters today as a complete summary of the League’s efforts towards disarmament since its foundation. Observers here did not regard the new American Amba.-sador’s speech as advancing a novel theory, but as | merely stating in a vigorous manner) design'd to interest the general pub-1 lie, exactly what the League constantly has held as the only practical method of disarmament procedure. WEALTHY MAN DIES
—o—
YONKERS, N. Y., June 20. (UP)—
Alexander Smith Cochran, philanthropist, sportsman and carpet manufacturer, died early today at Saranac Lake, it was announced at the offices of the Alexander Smith & Sons Carpet Company, of which he was the
principal owner. He was 58. Ganna Walska, soprano, became
! Cochran’s wife in Paris in September 1920, but in 1922 the marriage was j terminated by a divorce settlement in | which the Polish sing> r was .-.aid to have received $1,000,000. She later
HTTVT'sVli IK Toy inno *20 11 TP 11 leader Watson aiose to make the anHl NEVILLE, Ex., June 20. (I ^ nouncement he had “heard from the
newspapermen” the House bad adjourned ami therefore (lure eemed to be no reason for the Senate to
continue in session.
Such disregard of the closing formalities is extremely unusual and giv> indication <>f what bittW warfare may be expected when the Senate revi es the House tariff bill as Senate lead-
ers have promised.
Sub-committees are continuing at work in the Senate finance committee cliamliers, well up with their hcIv d ule which call, for concluding tariff hearings July 16. The full committee then will go into executive session to rewrite the House bill. There is a g nera limpres. ion around the Sen-
SIGNS BRIDGE BILL WASHINGTON, June 20. (UP) -
signed a bill
authorizing Illinois and Indiana joint-
ly to construct a bridge ac
Wabash river at or near Vincennes,
Ind.
the ( ate that the House will not recognize
Latta’s Car Vtas Stopped On Track Inquest Reveals
CORNER IS I N MILE IO RETURN ACCIDENTAL DEATH VERDICT
iE POCKETBOOK BELONGS TO married Harold McCormick.
GEORGE POTTER OF '
RUSSELLVILLE
GIRL IS LOCATED
—o—
PERU, Ind.. June 20. (UP)—Mis*.
hree practically empty pocket- i
'k* which were found floating in a; ing since Monday when she wa- said
at the cement plant on 'nesday afternoon after the barue, were turned over to Marshal td Grimes late Wednesday, ne folding poeketbook contained a key, and an identification
•i- This poeketbook belonged to or ge Potter, town marshal of RusEille, who attended the barbecue
Mnnday. n wa* turn* d over to I Friday. , ... , . ‘"ard Maddox, a relative of Mr. | Mr>. Wise said she did not know tor, to be returned to him. why her daughter left, but Mieved The othei two were snap leather [she had been offered a position by
kftbocks and contained nothing in the stranger.
, w »v of identification. Both were , —u 11 moiat from being in the pond, INDIANAPOLIS L - w»dav morning 1 INDIANAPOLIS, June 20. <UP) -
K ) - ” off 20 to 35 cents at the
NOBEESVILLE, Ind., June 20. (UP) The automobile in which Will H. Isitta, Indianapoli.- attorney, was killed near Carmel, Ind., while en- ! route to Ct. Wayne, to be manied, was standing .*(111 on railroad track* without lights, according to testimony at a coroner’s inquest. After u eompleC investigation of witnesses and dues, in connection with Latta’s death, which occured when a train struck his automobile at a crossing. Coroner Frank J. Evan -aid evidence was such that he could not not return a verdict of accidental
death.
He further said that evidence he | had obtained did not warrant any
other verdict.
Holmes, engineer
“Why did you kill the girl?” “I have been advised by my counsel not to talk,” the mild mannered
professor parried.
“Why did you kill the girl
lips repeated.
“Well, she hail been begging me j for cocaine,” Snook burst out. “Wait j
until it all comes out.”
Snook then asked for his attorney, j “Bting Mr. Seidel here and I'll tell
all.”
Questioning failed to elicit further information and preparations were made to bring Seidel to the prison. That was as far as authorities pro-gres-od in their attempt to persuade the professor to expand his statements. When Seidel reaehed the jail, he went immediately to Dr. Snook’s cell, conferred with him and emerge'! to repoit that the prisoner was “all
befuddled.”
“Dr. Snook denies that he has confessed the murder,” Seidel told newspapermen. “The professor i all befuddled and want- to get away from the invi stigators for awhile before saying anything more.” Yesterday an anu!\ i - <li.-closed that Dr. Snook’., automobile was spotted with blood. Plied with questions regarding this report, the professor had only one explanation. “If there were such pots, they must have come from some dog on which I operated,” he suggested. When the long ordeal of questioning started for Snook, he was followi e<l into the office of chief of detec-
Two automobiles crashing headon
Pathway,” Williamson; “Live,” Coyle; | at the intersection of the National “Rain Before Seven,” Fox; “Malibu's”,) Road and State Highway 43, south of
Turk- Greencastle at 10:30 o’clock Thursday
Kea;j morning resulted in Mrs. A M. Welch )27, of Dallas, Texas, su.-tsining serious injuries which may cause her death. The woman suffered a fractured skull; both legs were broken at the knees; the right arm was fractured below the elbow, and her face was severely lacerated. )Her husband, although uninjured, is suffering from
shock.
Mr. and Mrs. Welch, who had been visiting in Toledo, Ohio, were going we.-t enroute to their home in Texas in their Ford coupe. As they reached the junction of the two highways, it is said, Mr. Welch atempted to pass a truck. A Nash sedan, going east, also started around another car and the two autos met headon. A man in the Nash was reported to have received minor cuts and bruises. Rector’s ambulance and Dr. W. M. McGaughey were called to the scene of the accident. Mrs. Welch was brought to the county hospital here in an unconsciousness condition. According to Dr. McGaughey she is critij-
BANQUET HELD WEDNESDAY AT LOISUDEN HALL
NEW YORK M VN IN ADDRESS TO THEOLOGICAL S( HOOL
STUDENTS
CLASSES
END
FRIDAY
About Eighty Attend Meeting Wednesday Evening. Dr. Eongden
Represents University
An a<Id re. > by Mac Rossie Allan, of New Y'ork City, educational director on the commission for courses of study of the Methodist Episcopal
tin
.,1,0 i church, was the main feature of thej«Hy injured and slight hop* is held
1 banquet attended In 80 students and; f° r bt ’ r recovery,
faculty members of the Summer j '» '»ie Welch car. a popular magaSchool of Theology at Eongden Hall;*'"'' w “® f" 1 "" 1 addressed to Mr *- A - last night. E. Sterrett, 3638 (Homewood Avenue, Brief talks were given by some of Ioledo, Ohio, it was thought that the members of the different classes''his was the address where Mr. and
and groups. Dr. Henry It. Eongden Mrs. Welch had been visiting,
represented the University. Special rals ''“''ly damaged as music was provided by the Bloom-[a result »f the terrific force of their ington district male quartet, whose c rash. I he entire fiont part of the members are: the Rc v . C. S. Black, was P uah «d back, Including the Bedford; the Rev. R. E. Walker, New-; The windshield was not .Haberry; the Rev. R. S. Taylor, Lyons; J t * rw1 'but contained innumerable small
and the Rev. K. C. Minton, Ellets-; cracks.
I be seat of the Ford was thrown forward and the steering wheel was push'd out against the windshield. The
ville.
The committee on resolutions re-
ported, expressing the school’s ap , . , ... ,, . for everything done for t(, P was dented, and the side window.
it- bill by the time the Senate gets
through with it.
The sudden and ilent reccs, of the House left the Jones prohibition resolution demanded by Presiden' Hoover, unpassed in Hie Senate. 'I be resolution proposed appointment of a joint congressional committee to study the transfer of prohibition enforcement from the trea ;ury to the ju-tice
di partment.
Only a few minor bills slipi>cd jtjvrs M. G. Shcllanburgcr by the dead through in the closing moments. OneJ^jriv father, Melvin T. Mix, who starof these was thi' n solution author-|ed steadily at the prisoner, but did izing the sccietarv of treasury to ae not speak. cept payment of a portion of the , o
French war debt.
predation
them by Del’auw University, Mrs. Katherine Mills, director of Eongden Hall, and the special lecturers. Friday noon the Summer School of Theology, which ha: been under the direction of Dr. W. B. Farmer, of Indianapolis, will clo.-e its nintli con-
secutive year of work at DePauw. Examinations and one lecture will A hearing in the case of Frances constitute the morning’s program. J Frank against Leslie frank, a suit Next year, the school will open its G>r divorce, was heard by Judge Jas. thirty In t year of work with a sum-1 ^ Hughes in the circuit court Ihursmcr . c.ssion at DePauw University, day morning. The defendant was or
broken out. , The Franklin Street Wrecker was called and towed the coupe into Greencastle. The Nash was taken to Bra-
zil for repairs.
PRELIMINARY HEARING
beginning on the evening of June 9.
(y. 0. V. Editorial Croup At Bwliord
derel to pay $25 to the plaintiff’s attorneys, James and Allee. F. S. Hamilton is the attorney for the de-
fendant.
CONVICTS STAGE BREAK
PAPERMEN 1 NDEKW AY
of
the
to have left her home in the company
of a stranger, Omhra Wise, 20, will Art | iur
return to her home tomorrow, 1 i tni in, said he saw Latta in the magirl’s mother told the United * reHS tb i n ,. w |, en approaching it and that today. . apparently made no effort to esThe mother, Mrs. Sarah Wise, said i Other witin * • said lights on she received a letter from her daugh- mac hlne were extinguished,
ter, mailed at Liberty Mills, Ind., nearj Huntington, saying she would arrive
ATTACKED SM \LE GIRL
INDIANAPOLIS, June 20 (UP)— Carroll Beatty, 33, inmate of the County Infirmary, today wa charged with criminal attack on a 4 year-old giil, who is recovering in City Ho*,
i pital from injuries he inflicted. De- ing of the Indiana Republican
j tectives said Beatty confessed to thejtorial Association open'j here today. BLOOMINGTON WOMAN’S RKSI- at t a ,,| (i j Approximately 150 delegates toDENCE IS SCENE OF LIQUOR | hH(1 be ,. M in j. s j n( , from the poor | ther with their friends and famil-
Mother Of Ten Faces Sentence
HOUSTON, Tex.. June 20. (UP)—
, ______ I Kidnaping four guards, between 40 \NNI \L MID-SUMMER SESSION|““d 50 »' rison '' r8 <’ ! “’*P p d from the
OF REPUBLICAN NEWS
BEDFORD, Ind., June The annual two-day mid
20. (UP) — ummer out-
Edi-
R MD
farm for four day , and was confin-'expected to register.
- 1 ed there two months ago after an ut-
BLOOMINGTON, Ind., June 29. — I tempt to lure small girls into a
she sold liquor to sup-; swamp in the northeast part of the
SUIT ON ACCOUNT
Eojcoe Young filed a suit on ac- ^ the Putnam Circuit court *' n, t C. L. Landis, Wednesday aft-
ioen.
^ i" gment of $86 on a bill which bay, corn, and rent, is asked ^ plaintiff, and the costs of the 'Fred V. Thomas is th-' attor1 f ot the plaintiff.
Della Zeta’s To Remodel, Report
MAY (H ( UPY OLD DELTA HOUSE Dl KING NEXT
SCHOOL YEAR
Asserting that
port her 10 children, five of whom are city, ill, Mrs. Minnie Stevens today faced j charge., of violating the dry laws. | The woman said she attempted to obtain aid after h r husband was kill-; ^
ed in an alleged liquor brawl with ' l winds tonight. cousin. 0
The mother was peimittH to re-,
main with her children pending trial DEMANDS MADE without having to post bond, the judge BERLIN, June 20. (I I ) Official-1 explaining "that l am sure she can ly informed political and n'wspaper| be found with her children when ] observer*, commenting on the Paris wanted” I conference between Dr. Gustav KtreseSheriff R. H. Stephens made a raid ' mann, German foreign minister, and on the widow’s home after receiving French government leaders, revealed complaints that it was the scene of today that Sires* mann demanded drunken parties, in which it was al-j France’s assurance of immediate evact*.geiI that Mrs. Steven.-’ 14 year old uation of the Rhineland and a swift daughter participated. ! return of the Saar Valley to GerAuthoritu s said the woman emptied many us a condition of Germany’ uei seveiul jars of alleged liquor into ajceptanie of the Young reparations
ink when they made the raid. An plan.
and 100 gallons of In spite of the Paris denials that
I the important political subjects were mind dfocussed by Streaemann and the
Although the outing primarily is for newspapermen, several Republican state office holder - and party workers
were in atU ndance.
Governor Harry (!. Leslie, was to be
in attendance at all meetings of the
THE WEATHER ■ editors and was . eheiluled to address Thunderstorms tonight, followed 1 the gathering tonight at a banquet, by generally fair. F'ri'iay cooler, pos-j Yaiious forms of entertainments
have been arranged, including a trip through the stone quarries, dinners!
an I "get together meetings.” Following its usual custom, the a .-
sociation was not expected to take]
Clemens State Farm early today, mes--ages received here said. Stripped rtf their arms, the guards were taken with the fugitives, but later permit-
ted to return alune.
Captain W. M. Hickman, farm manager, assembled a large posse of officers and citizens and started a search of Brazoria and adjoining coun-
ties.
IN TROUBLE AGAIN —o— WASHINGTON, June 20 (UP) — James Thomas Heflin, Jr., son of Senator Thomas Heflin, Democrat, Alabama, pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving an automobile while under the influence of Narcotics when arraigned before Judge Isaac Hitt in Police court here today.
18 gallon still
[ Hogs sold
j Union Stock yards here today on re-
ceipt of approximately 1,''00 head. The , rU ,| t |, at the Delta Ze'anna h were confiscated. bulk price of $11 to $1140 was | , ' t(l „ i( „ idence Explaining that she did not
: market wa, .5 hi,atm- JNW. W. J£»t£ lamal.y, M,a ^ — p „. it „l,e far
!•*— * * * * m.tVnea. a’ml -m
$7.50 to $12. Cattle receipts r- h ^ scll „ ol year while the business, saying that she wl.ned -vs rxrxsw. uw«)■'• uk ” * u **•
insisted
formal action on political problems but was expected to di-cuss plan:; for the next election. Much speculation has arose over candidates for the next contest, several names being mentioned aa probable entrants in the Gubemational
race.
Bert Thurman, Otto G. Fifteld. present secretary of date, and Attorri'W General James M. Ogden have been mentioned as possible candidat-
es for Governor.
Frederick Schortemeier, who was defeated for the Republican nomina-
been men-
tioned. as a prospective candidate for
office.
R.
129 Enrolled In Summer Classes
SMALL NUMBER TAKING ADVANTAGE OF UNIVERSITY SUMMER SUHOOL
Sh.> refused to name person who yesterday, German ob ervers
' bSleved lo h.v, e— >»
I made himself clear on the point. 1 the convention.
Aicording to Prof. William A. Hug* gnrd, there ar«- 129 students enrolled in DePauw University for the summer session, 84 in I iberal Art* courses and 45 in Music course*. Most of the student* taking work this summer are from Indiana and are undergraduates. About 20 of them are finishing up their work to
graduate.
No -pecial activities ate planned,
address unless there is a concert and some
J par ties.
